*Reminder: The global-average temperature for the past 12 months
(September 2023 – August 2024) is the highest on record for any 12-month
period, 1.64°C above the 1850–1900 pre-industrial average. *


phys.org /news/2024-10-climate-scientists-temperature-exceeding-paris.html
<https://phys.org/news/2024-10-climate-scientists-temperature-exceeding-paris.html>
Most
climate scientists foresee temperature rise exceeding Paris Agreement
targets, study finds 01/10/2024
------------------------------

by Patrick Lejtenyi, Concordia University <http://www.concordia.ca/>

A new survey of climate experts reveals that a majority believe the Earth
to be headed for a rise in global temperatures far higher than the 2015
Paris Agreement targets of 1.5 to well-below 2°C.

The study was published <https://www.nature.com/articles/s43247-024-01661-8>
in *Communications Earth & Environment*. It also shows that two-thirds of
respondents—all of them authors on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC)—believe we may succeed in achieving net zero CO2 emissions
during the second half of this century. This indicates some optimism that
mitigation efforts may be starting to bend the emissions curve toward what
would be needed to achieve the Paris temperature goal.

A majority also acknowledged the potential for atmospheric CO2 removal,
with a median response indicating a belief that the technology could remove
up to five gigatons of carbon dioxide (GtCO2) a year by 2050. That is at
the lower end of the range believed to be necessary to meet the Paris
targets.

"We wanted to survey some of the top climate experts in the world to get
some insight into their perceptions of different future climate outcomes,"
says the paper's lead author, Seth Wynes, a former postdoctoral fellow at
Concordia, now an assistant professor at the University of Waterloo.

"These scientists also engage in important climate change
<https://phys.org/tags/climate+change/> communication, so their optimism or
pessimism can affect how decisionmakers are receiving messages about
climate change."

More is needed to avert catastrophe

The 211 respondents to the survey were generally pessimistic about reaching
the Paris targets given current policies, with 86% estimating warming above
2˚C by 2100. The median estimate was 2.7˚C, which is expected to have
catastrophic consequences for the planet.

Co-author Damon Matthews, a professor in the Department of Geography,
Planning and Environment, notes that this does not mean that the level of
warming is inevitable.

"These responses are not a prediction of future warming, but rather a gauge
of what the scientific community believes. The answers are surprisingly
consistent with previous estimates of what would happen if our current
climate policies continued without any increase in ambition, which range
from about 2.5 to 3˚C."

Along with questions about the likelihood of future climate outcomes, the
respondents were also asked to estimate their peers' responses to the same
questions.

"There was a strong correlation between what people believe and what they
sense their peers believe," Wynes says. "They had a bias to see their
beliefs as representative of the larger group. This can indicate an
overconfidence in their own beliefs, so we think this is a good opportunity
for them to reevaluate what their peers actually believe."
Working with data, not policy

An IPCC author himself, Matthews admits that scientists' views on possible
climate scenarios are valuable, but other perspectives on the issues around
climate change are necessary if we hope to slow it.

"Climate scientists certainly have expertise in climate systems and energy
transitions, but it will be policy implementation and societal change that
actually determine how quickly emissions drop," he says.

"Ultimately, the decision as to what we do and how we respond to the
climate challenge is up to policymakers and the public that they represent,
and I think the full range of outcomes is still very much on the table."

Contributing authors to this paper include Steven Davis of Stanford
University, Ph.D. candidate Mitchell Dickau and MSc student Susan Ly at
Concordia University, Edward Maibach at George Mason University, Joeri
Rogelj at Imperial College, London and Kirsten Zickfeld at Simon Fraser
University.

*More information:* Seth Wynes et al, Perceptions of carbon dioxide
emission reductions and future warming among climate experts, *Communications
Earth & Environment* (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s43247-024-01661-8
<https://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s43247-024-01661-8>
------------------------------

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